`value.end() - 3` may be "before start of string" if string length is < 3.
On Windows debug, is throw an exception.
On other platform it is probably an undefined behavior.
Rewrite the test to avoid such invalid substraction.
This change is a quick hack solving known issues with URI-encoding in
libkiwix.
This change removes the slash character from the list of URL separator
symbols in URL encoding/decoding utilities, and makes it a symbol that
is safe to leave unencoded.
Effects:
- `urlEncode()` never encodes the '/' symbol (even when it is requested
to encode the URL separator symbols too).
- `urlDecode(str)`/`urlDecode(..., false)` will now decode %2F to '/';
other encoded URL separator symbols are NOT decoded when the second
argument of `urlDecode()` is set to false (which is the default).
- Throw a exception if we cannot extract from string.
(We throw the same exception as `std::sto*`)
- Add a specialization to extract string from string
- Add some unit test
Mimetype may contain a parameters.
Then, the mimetype would be something like "text/html;foo=bar;foz=baz"
It will contains a `;` and `=` and it conflicts with the same operators
we use to separate the items in our list.
We have to use a more advanced algorithm which takes the context into
account.
Fix#416
Api changes :
- removeLastPathElement do not takes extra arguments
`removePreSeparator` and `removePostSeparator`.
This is not needed as path do not need special tailing separator.
- Only one function `split`. Arguments can be implicitly convert to
string. No need for overloading functions to explicitly cast them.
- `split` function takes another argument `trimEmpty`. If true, empty
element are removed.
Path manipulation now almost pass trough a vector<string> to store each
path's part.
Most of the complex works is now made in the normalizeParts function.
The `common` name is from the time where kiwix was only one repository
for all the project (android, desktop, server...).
Now we have split the repositories and kiwix-lib is the "common" repo,
the "common" directory is somehow nonsense.